EUGENE SUSSLI, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
CITY OF SAN MATEO et al., Defendants and Respondents.
Cоurt of Appeals of California, First District, Division One.
*3 COUNSEL
Pettit & Martin, Neil H. O'Donnell, Leo F. Orenstein, Rogers, Joseph, O'Donnell & Quinn, Margaret C. Crosby, Alan L. Schlosser and Amitai Schwartz for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Maurice K. Hamilton and Douglass Dang, City Attorneys, and Lyle L. Lopus, Assistant City Attorney, for Defendants and Respondents.
John M. Powers, City Attorney (Vallejo), and William R. Galstan, City Attorney (Antioch), as Amici Curiae on behalf of Defendants and Respondents.
OPINION
NEWSOM, J.
Appellant Eugene Sussli was a candidate for the San Mateо City Council in an election held on March 8, 1977. Prior to the election, campaign signs supporting the candidacy of appellant and the reelection of another candidate, John Condon, were posted on public property within the city. On February 8, 1977, the city attorney sent a letter to all candidates, including Sussli, informing them that sign posting on public property was prohibited by local ordinance section 25.04.090, reproduced verbatim in the margin,[1] and rеquesting that all such campaign signs be removed no later than the following week under threat of summary removal by city officials. The letter also advised that under applicable ordinance provisions, sign posting on private property was permissible with the consent of the owner of the property. A copy of the ordinance regulating the time, manner and placement of an "election sign" was included with the written notification.[2]
*4 When the candidates refused to comply with the written request, city personnel undertook removal of the offending signs, resulting in the institution of suit for injunctive and declaratory relief. At the conclusion of the hearing the trial court made its decision upholding the ordinance prohibiting the posting of campaign signs on all public property with its attendant sanction of summary removal. Following the adoption of written findings and conclusion and entry of formal judgment, candidate Sussli instituted this aрpeal.[3]
(1a) The principal theory of the complaint is that the challenged ordinance constitutes an impermissible abridgement of the right of free speech guaranteed under the provisions of the federal and state Constitution.[4] Respondents denied the charging allegations and affirmatively alleged that the ordinance was justified on the grounds of overriding governmental interests.[5]
On appeal, while conceding that the right to erect or post signs on public property is subject to reasonable regulations for legitimate governmental purposes, Sussli asserts that the absolute ban imposed by the ordinance of a protected First Amendment interest is constitutionally defective on its face. Moreover, he argues, the governmental interests advanced cannot justify what amounts to an overbroad restriction on the right of free speech.
Respondents counter that the uniform imposition of the prohibition against sign posting on any public property does not represent an unlawful *5 intrusion into traditional forums for protectible First Amendment activities. Alternatively, with heavy reliance placed upon the relevant criteria announced in Baldwin v. Redwood City (9th Cir.1976)
The precise question prеsented characterized by the parties as whether a city may totally prohibit the posting of political signs on public property within the city is apparently one of first impression.[6] The significance of that central issue is underscored in amici's brief on behalf of 48 California cities who had ordinances similar to the ordinance under review.
Sussli's initial attack on the facial validity of the ordinance focuses upon the mode of expression as a form of protected speech which cannot be entirely banned from a traditional forum for the exercise of First Amendment rights. Thus, the argument continues, once First Amendment protection is extended to the means of communication such as sign posting, any legislative attempt to ban outright such protected medium of speech from the public forum is unconstitutional per se.
In fact the courts have repeatedly recognized that virtually all mоdes of communication used to disseminate ideas and protected expression on the public streets fall within the protective umbrella of the First Amendment. (Kash Enterprises, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles (1977)
In deciding First Amendment claims in the context of regulatory statutes, however, the primary inquiry is not so much whether a particular mode of communication is protected since "[t]he right of free speech necessarily embodies the means used for its dissemination...." (Wollam v. City of Palm Springs, supra,
Thus, while section 25.04.090 establishes a blanket prohibition neutrally directed against all inanimate modes of expression on public property (within a regulatory scheme permitting placement of temporary election signs on private property (§ 25.12.130)), the test to be applied in determining whether it survives a constitutional challenge necessarily requires a balancing of competing interests. (Schneider v. State, supra,
In applying the correct constitutional standard, the trial court found that the content-neutral ordinance fostered significant governmental interests, which included traffic safety and aesthetic considerations, interests wholly unrelated to suppression of expression and rationally connected to the restrictions imposed.[8] (Cf. United States v. O'Brien, supra,
It is equally clear that the First Amendment interests involved in the display of political posters adjacent to public thoroughfares are substantial in nature. (Baldwin v. Redwood City, supra,
Of course, it is settled law that within the context of the traditional public forum, abridgement of the freedom of expression may not be conditioned upon the existence of alternative channels of communication. (Grayned v. City of Rockford (1972)
Certainly, the fact that "means of political communication are not entirely fungible; [and] political posters have unique advantages" (Baldwin v. Redwood City, supra,
Thus, although the governmental purpose be legitimate and substantial, such purpose may not be achieved "by means that broadly stifle fundamental personal liberties when the end can be more narrowly achieved. [Fn. omitted.]" (Shelton v. Tucker (1960)
(1b) As earlier stated, the resolution of this legal question requires a balancing process. In weighing the competing interests at stake, we attach special significance to the compelling interest of the public in maintaining some semblance of visual harmony in the areas where they live. Thousands of tattered derelict signs from past elections testify to the difficulty of protecting public property from unsightly signs even *10 where laws forbid public posting. Without such laws one foresees an absolute end to the already eroded aesthetic integrity of public places in а tidal wave of publicly sponsored graffiti.[10]
We find it difficult to understand how the legitimate purpose of preventing this inundation could be more "narrowly achieved" how local government can keep election placards from public poles on public property except by an ordinance prohibiting them.
It may well be that, in circumstances not easily imagined, such an ordinance will, because of overbreadth, have the effect оf contravening First Amendment rights. But that overbreadth, if it exists, has imposed no prejudice that we are able to discern upon the appellant Sussli, whose injury seems entirely hypothetical. It is a well-settled principle of constitutional law that "one will not be heard to attack a statute on grounds that are not shown to be applicable to himself, and that a court will not consider every conceivable situation which might arise under the language of thе statute and will not consider the question of constitutionality with reference to hypothetical situations." (In re Cregler (1961)
A sometimes exception to this rule will obtain "where a provision restricting free speech and the free dissemination of ideas is involved," in which case a court, in considering overbreadth or vagueness, "may take into account the operation of the provision as to factual situations other than the one at bar." (Fort v. Civil Service Commission (1964)
*11 In arriving at this conclusion, we would stress that those who follow in Sussli's footsteps will, like him, have available to them innumerable modes of political expression in both private and public forums, including the unchallengable right to use public places for traditional speech. To say that this is insufficient merely because it is incomplete, and that every man has at all times an unabridgible right to use every possible means of expression irrespective of any legitimate counteravailing public interest, seems to us erroneous.
For these reasons we conclude that the trial court correctly concluded that the ordinance at issue is constitutionally permissible.
The judgment is affirmed.
Elkington, J., concurred.
RACANELLI, P.J.
I respectfully dissent:
Under the broad prohibition imposed by the ordinance, sign posting of any naturе on public property "except as may be required or permitted by ordinance or law" (§ 25.04.090)[1] is wholly forbidden. The sweeping provisions would extend to posters and signs of any nature, whether temporary or otherwise, placed upon any public property including streets, sidewalks and parks. Such overinclusive language would condemn even the use of privately mounted temporary political placards or notices inoffensively placed upon a public sidewalk either with the consent of or by the occupier of abutting business premises. Certainly such time-honored means of political expression should be afforded the same level of reasonable access as extended to the dissemination of other protected materials. (Cf., e.g., Remer v. City of El Cajon (1975)
While considerations of public safety undoubtedly warrant the imposition of reasonable restrictions, the city could easily achieve such an objective by a more narrowly drawn ordinance relating to public placement of temporary political signs.[2] Nor will aesthetic considerations alone justify unrestricted intrusion into constitutionаlly protected areas. (See Van Nuys Pub. Co. v. City of Thousand Oaks (1971)
In a democratic society the right of free expression occupies a most preferred position (see Burton v. Municipal Court (1968)
In its effort to balance the competing interests involved, the majority strikes a devastating blow to a long established method of political expression utilizing a medium which often as Marshall McLuhan admonishes is the message itself.
Since the critical language of the ordinance herein purports to totally circumscribe the exercise of a fundamental individual liberty within traditional public forums whose use for purposes of free expression has been entrusted from time immemorial (Hague v. C.I.O. (1939)
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 12, 1981. Racanelli, P.J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted. Appellant's petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 8, 1981.
NOTES
[1] Section 25.04.090 reads as follows: "POSTING ON PUBLIC PROPERTY PROHIBITED. No person, except a duly authorized public officer or employee, shall erect, construct or maintain, paste, paint, print, nail, tack or otherwise fasten or affix, any card, banner, handbill, campaign sign, poster, sign, advertisement, or notice of any kind, or cause or suffer the same to be done, on any curbstone, lamppost, pole, bench, hydrant, bridge, wall, tree, sidewalk or structure in or upon any public street, alley, or upon any other public property, except as may be required or permitted by ordinance оr law; no person shall deface, mar or disfigure any bridge, fence, building or other structure belonging to city, or any tree located in any public property or place, by painting, cutting, scratching or breaking the same, or attaching or affixing anything thereto."
[2] Under the provisions of the ordinance (§ 25.12.130) only peripherally involved herein the placement of an election or temporary sign on private property is authorized upon the issuance of a city permit, pursuant to conditions requiring the owner's consent and placement and removal no earlier than six weeks before and ten days after the election date, respectively. Issuance of the permit is further conditioned upon payment of a refundable $25 deposit, subject to forfeiture in the event of noncompliance with the removal condition.
Notes
[3] We are advised that Mr. Condon died sometime after the filing of suit.
[4] Unless the context of our discussion indicates otherwise, reference to First Amendment rights is intended to include the similar guaranty under California Constitution article I, section 2.
[5] The public interests to be served were enumerated as follows: 1) prevention of damage to public property; 2) preservation of public confidence in the neutrality of elections; 3) protection of the public from the blare of political propaganda; 4) avoidance of administrative burdens associated with the need to monitor the placement of signs on public property and their eventual removal; 5) preservation of the prominence of public signs and lines of sight in the interests of traffic safety; and aesthetic considerations. The trial court expressly found that in light of the permissible posting of election signs on private property, all of such interests were substantial in relation to the incidental restriction imposed on public property sign posting as a means of expression.
[6] Whether and under what circumstances public property must be made available as a forum for First Amendment activities has yet to be definitively determined. (Dulaney v. Municipal Court (1974)
[7] Where, as here, the regulаtory provision is content-neutral requiring a case by case balancing approach, the use of the term "incidental" is to be considered as describing a resulting purpose and effect. That is to say, the causal effect of whatever magnitude on the protected activity must be merely incidental to the legislative purpose as distinguished from "insubstantial." (Cf., e.g., Fair Political Practices Com. v. Superior Court (1979)
[8] Amici suggest other compelling interests involving potential liability exposure for negligently posted signs (see generally Gov. Code, § 835), and somewhat surprisingly as "publishers" of libelous political signs. (Cf. Good Government Group of Seal Beach, Inc. v. Superior Court (1978)
[9] However, some pragmatic persuasion attaches to Sussli's hypothetical claim suggesting that even the use of alternative channels of communication such as media advertising or private property posting could be effectively foreclosed by reason of cost constraints or the very nature of the expression involved, e.g., proposed property tax increases or rent control issues.
[10] The rational basis for differentiating between political signs relating to specific elections and those which pertain to the conduct of government in general seems tenuous at best. (Cf. Wirta v. Alameda-Contra Costa Transit Dist., supra,
[1] During oral argument the city conceded that no exceptions had thus far been ordained.
[2] For example, section 25.12.130, subdivision (4), рrovides in pertinent part that election signs may not be placed "in such manner as to pose a visibility hazard to pedestrian and motor vehicle traffic along the public highway, sidewalks or at street corners."
It must be emphasized that no claim is or could be made that local government may not enact regulations designed to prevent damage or defacement of publicly owned structures as provided in the last full sentence of section 25.04.090. (See National Delivery Systems, Inc. v. City of Inglewood (1974)
